Honest figures: Ethical data professionals in biology

BIOSCI 738 @ Waipapa Taumata Rau

Liza Bolton (guest lecture)

2025-03-17

Scan for slides & runsheet

or go to link.lizabolton.com

Kia ora koutou 欢迎大家

You hate your friend’s new haircut

If they ask you what you think, what do you say?




Google (2025) Gemini AI generated image from prompt: Create a lifelike image of 21-year-old person with a really terrible broccoli haircut. Truly disastrous, please. The hair should be green.

Why be ethical?

  • You want to do the ‘right’ thing
  • You / your organisation want to avoid negative professional consequences and reputational risks (have positive ones)
  • You / your organisation wants to avoid legal risks and comply with regulation

Some questions for ethical decision-making

The following are adapted from the Waipapa Taumata Rau Science Course WTR100 (Science

  1. “Does this action reflect the character traits that I strive to embody?” (virtue ethics)

  2. “Will the overall consequences of my action result in the greatest good for the greatest number of people?” (consequentialism)

  3. “Will my action positively affect the strength of interconnectedness and respect the mutual responsibilities inherent in the relationships that I have with others?” (relational ethics)

  4. “Does this action satisfy my moral responsibilities?” (deontology)

Codes of conduct

Last week you developed a Code of Conduct for this course. You may have also seen the Waipapa Taumata Rau University of Auckland Code of Conduct that applies to you as a student here.

The purpose of this Code is to develop and maintain a standard of behaviour that supports and enables the University’s commitment to being a safe, inclusive, equitable and respectful community; both in-person and online.


For people working in research and academia there are usually professional societies that have developed codes of conduct and ethical standards. The Royal Society Te Apārangi is a long established and well respected not-for-profit organisation in Aotearoa New Zealand and their Code of Conduct.


Link to poster summary

Group discussion 1 — see the runsheet

☕️ 10 minute break

Exploring a few ‘big ideas’ for ethical data practices

Group discussion 2 — see the runsheet

Slides: link.lizabolton.com